Interactive Transcript
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Let's take a look at a 56-year-old male
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with an elevated PSA and a negative biopsy.
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This is a tremendous indication for MRI
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when you're not in the low-tier group.
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In other words, when the PSA is rising
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at a rate that's disconcerting, maybe a 50%
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rise or a doubling in one year,
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or the PSA is hovering around 10 or greater.
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And then your suspicion is pretty
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high because the likelihood of cancer
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is almost 50%, which is pretty good.
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And the possibility of extension outside the
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gland when you're, uh, you with a total PSA over
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10 is also 50%, maybe even a little higher.
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So here you've got to go for something
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and MRI is just perfect because
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you can find aggressive cancers.
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So we've got an axial T2-weighted image
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on the left, and immediately we see several
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abnormalities in the peripheral zone.
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In the right PZP, the posterior aspect of the
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peripheral zone is an area of hypointensity.
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And there is a question as to whether it has
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fuzzed out and produced an ill-defined capsule.
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Here is the anatomic capsule.
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It's a line, it's a line, it's a line.
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Now it's an interface, because it
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has an opacity on one side, and we've
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completely lost that crisp line.
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So we're suspicious of capsular invasion, not just
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because we lost the line, but look at the bulging.
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And look at the asymmetry of the
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little speckled tissues on either side.
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Nice and speckled and bright, a little
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less so, and they're pushed away.
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Another sign: bulging and asymmetry
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of the neurovascular bundle, along
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with this broad area of contact, all
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suggestive of capsular involvement.
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Also, asymmetry.
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of the pericapsular prostatic fat.
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Another very important sign of capsular invasion.
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Now here is a fat suppression one.
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And while I like this to look internally
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at the gland because it makes the whites
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whiter and the darks darker, you can
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see the edge of the tumor very nicely.
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It does hamper substantially your
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ability to see transcapsular extension.
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Now this was done with 3D technique for mapping.
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This is 2D technique over here.
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Now what's the major criteria for
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peripheral zone abnormalities?
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It's actually not the T2-weighted
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image even though it's pretty.
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It's actually not the 3D fat suppression
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T2 image even though it's pretty.
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It's the diffusion image with a high B value.
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How high?
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Well, 1200 is the absolute floor.
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But I like them around 1400 or 1600.
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And the thing that's going to limit your ability
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to get into these high B values is the efficiency
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and strength of the gradient on your MRI.
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So this is a B1600, and right there
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we've got diffusion restriction.
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And the intensity that you
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see on diffusion restriction.
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And the degree of low signal on the
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accompanying ADC map has a lot to do
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with the aggressiveness of the cancer.
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So, extremes of hyperintensity.
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Extremes of parametric hyperintensity.
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Velocity restriction on the ADC map
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means you've got a higher Gleason score,
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which takes you into a poorer prognostic
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cavity, a poorer prognosis overall.
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So now let's look at the ADC map.
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I'm going to blow it up a little bit.
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The ADC map, a parametric map of
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velocities, more sensitive by the
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way than the diffusion image itself.
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It's a calculated image made on the basis of
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multiple diffusion images. Shows our area of
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velocity decrease or diffusion restriction as low.
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So it's high on diffusion,
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it's low on the ADC map.
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Now let me just take you through
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a series of diffusion images.
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Here's the low B-value image.
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We'll go right to our spot.
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And the low B-value image is nothing more
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than a very fast echoplanar T2-weighted image.
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So it looks a lot like the regular T2 image.
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Let's take the next B-value up, say 50.
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Still pretty low.
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And the next B-value up, kind
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of an intermediate B-value.
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It's getting a little bit less dark, and the
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tissues around it are getting a little less white.
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Now let's go to a B-value of 1200.
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It's getting brighter, the surrounding
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normal prostate is getting darker.
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Let's go to a B-value of 1600.
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It's pretty bright, and the
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surrounding tissue is darker.
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So you see how you take these series
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of B-value diffusion images
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in which you crank up the volume.
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You crank up the intensity of the diffusion
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gradients, and you invert the signal.
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The signal goes from dark to bright
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on the high B-value images, and
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the rest of the prostate drops out.
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Now, we measure this in the axial
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projection, and the measurement,
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we'll measure it for you right now.
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The measurement here was about a
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centimeter or less, 9 millimeters.
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So that would make it a PIRADS 4.
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We'll look at it in another projection.
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Let's do that.
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Let's pull down the sagittal.
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And there is our lesion in the back.
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It may be a little longer
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than we thought previously.
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Let's look at the length.
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So if it exceeds 1.5,
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it's 1.2.
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131 00:05:32,650 --> 00:05:35,489 So it's still in the PI-RADS 4 category.
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But we're not done yet.
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Let's look at the coronal projection.
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So let's pull that down and go right to our spot.
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And perhaps it's a little bigger.
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So it's a little hard to measure the upper part.
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You know, are we seeing some
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fibrosis there, or is that tumor?
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This is clearly tumor.
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So if we measure it from here
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to here, it's gonna be 1.44,
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that'd make it a PI-RADS 4.
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If we measure it from here to here,
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as the original reader did, you'll
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see that in the report, then that's 1.7,
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that would make it a PI-RADS 5.
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In my opinion, it probably stops a
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little bit lower, like right there, and
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this is just fibrous tissue over here.
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So that would categorize it as a PI-RADS 4.
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So you see the designation between
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a 4 and a 5 is pretty simple.
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If you're over 1.5,
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it's a PI-RADS 5.
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If you're under 1.5,
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it's a PI-RADS 4.
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And if it's 1.5,
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then you might want to use some of the other
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parameters and kind of split the difference
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to decide which direction you're going to go in.
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Critical finding in this case, suspicion for
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transcapsular microinvasion on the right side.
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Let's finish the case off with
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the dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI.
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Let's pull it down.
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So what you're looking at
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now is each anatomic locus.
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Let's go to the site of the
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tumor, which is right here.
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And we'll start off with the mask.
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So this would be before the contrast arrives.
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Okay.
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Here we are at 7 to 10 seconds.
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A little bit of hypervascularity, not a lot.
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Now we're at 14 seconds.
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Now we're at 21 seconds.
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And it starts to blend in
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with the rest of the prostate.
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So it's not that vascular initially,
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but it is washing out, isn't it?
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It's getting a little bit darker as time goes on.
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So it has a tumor-like curve,
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even though the peak of it is not that high.
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So if we were to draw the curve,
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then it would look something like this.
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Typically, the tumor curves will be really high,
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for the aggressive tumors and then have a washout.
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In the prostate, they're not as consistently
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as high as we see in the breast.
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So you might have something that
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looks a little bit like this,
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and then kind of a more gradual washout.
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And that would be the curve
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of this area right here.
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So in summary, this would be a PI-RADS 4/5,
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depending upon what size criteria
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you use with microcapsular invasion suspected
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in the posterolateral right side, PZP area.
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And PZL2, posterolateral.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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